20 Most Recent
Mission M-CUBE System Questions & Answers
M-CUBE Subwoofer repairs
It's common. The BASH branded power supply is rubbish. Generally it's the pair of fets on the primary side of the transformer that fail. They sit beside a daughter board that also has a cooking transistor.
M-cube wiring diagram for umbilicel
The socket the umbilical plugs into, is connected directly to the speaker output terminals. Your HiFi amp just feeds through the mission sub. The sub looks at the speaker terminals for bass information present. Making whatever noise it see's fit. I use one of these for a PC setup. I run a speaker wire from just one of my 2 desktop speakers, to any set of speaker out terminals on the sub that I like. The sub watches all 6 sets anyway, and my 2.0 desktop will be mono bass. So just one speaker wire is all it takes.
Mission m-cube sub fuse keeps blowing
If you have replaced with the correct rating and the fuse blows off then you will need to check for higher current drain in the sub woofer or the network. After replacing the fuse load up the subwoofer slowly, reduce the bass and as you increase check at the point the fuse blows off. Now we need to analyse if the rating of the amplifier you are using is rated for the subwoofer. If your subwoofer has a higher rating you can increase the rating by about 25% and check again. Some amplifiers give a very higher voltage on full bass which could result in such a condition. Moderate this and check again. If the fuse stays Ok you can continue with this new rating.Otherwise the output of the amp at higher volume needs a confirmation. Hope this helps. Good day
Hand sanding wood
When sanding with a hand sanding block, I will lift the block off the surface being sanded and clap my hand onto the block to release sawdust buildup from the sand paper. I even do this when using an electric sander. The sander does a quicker job by not having to 're-sand' the sawdust that is trapped between the sandpaper and wood.
Got a set off mission
I would upgrade your speaker wire simply because the old might have a fault in it. Plus replacing it will eliminate it form any problems. Also check all connections for the wiring. I would recommend with second hand speakers that you get someone to look them over. Maybe what in the trade is called a "phantom dabbler" has been inside. With things such as bad soldering, or replacing a competent with the wrong part(s), or the wrong way around, or wrong connections.
One way to check is to look at any case screws heads for damage, only slight perhaps. Then you know somebody has been inside before.
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